Contractors and Certificates of Liability Insurance

Your E&O claim waiting to happen


Certificates — not again. Haven’t we heard enough about this topic?

Apparently not.

Certificates are issued for all sorts of insureds, but contracting risk is the most dangerous of them all. Why does the contractor ask for a certificate?

The answer is simple. Contractors need it to get the job, or they need to get paid for work they have already performed. That is all they really care about. They want it, they want it now (or yesterday) and they want it their way. That means if the insured contractor’s client (or business associate) requests language added, language removed or persons added to a certificate — all of which may be improper — the insured wants to have it done that way.

That leaves the agent/broker in harms way. On the one hand, the agent/broker wants to keep the client happy. On the other hand, everyone involved in issuing the certificate is a potential defendant in an errors and omissions or bad faith lawsuit for incorrectly completing the form.

Who Should Issue Certificates?

Only an appointed insurance agent should issue certificates. What does this mean?

It means that if you are a broker, you do not issue a certificate. If you are writing insurance through a managing general agent, you do not issue a certificate. If you are placing coverage with a pool, you do not issue a certificate.

Those scenarios can be more complex than they first appear. For example, an insurance agent or broker (retailer) may be appointed as an “agent” of an MGA or act as a “broker” placing business through an excess and surplus lines broker. Al-though the retailer may have a contract with the wholesaler, that does not create a contractual relationship between the retailer and the insurance company providing the insurance policy. Therein lies the problem.

For a retail broker to issue a certificate in a wholesale coverage placement, the retailer must receive that permission from the insurance company, not the wholesaler. That normally does not happen, but rather the wholesaler gives that permission. If the wholesaler is not willing or able to issue the necessary certificates, the agent/broker should provide only the information requested, attach all pertinent endorsements, never change any pre-printed language on the certificate and send a copy to the wholesaler (even if they don’t want it).

Clearly, any written authority provided by the wholesaler on behalf of the insurance company to the retailer allowing the retailer to issue certificates should be retained in the retailer’s files. That does not mean it is a correct transaction, but rather is documentation of the incorrectness of it all.

Why Issue Certificates?

Certificates generally are written to provide evidence of insurance to a party other than the insured, no more, no less. That is important because the person for whom the certificate is issued is not a party to the insurance contract and has not paid a plug nickel for the privilege of coverage (that is called a consideration for a contract). After all, the insured only needs it to get the job and prove he or she has insurance.

That issue is the crux of much insurance litigation.

What certificate form should be used?

The insurance industry standard for certificates of liability insurance is form 25, promulgated by the ACORD Co. In part, the ACORD guidelines for certificates of liability state, “In 1974, the Court of Appeals, Fifth District ruled that a certificate is not a contract between the holder and the insurer. It only provides information to an interested third party that insurance is in force at the time of issuance. The court also stated, ‘The provision regarding notification in the event of cancellation is a mere promise, unsupported by any consideration.’ Although many companies provide notice of cancellation to certificate holders, they are not obliged to do so, because the holder is not a party to the contract. Agents or brokers should not change any provision on this form without prior consent of the issuing company.”

So, the general contractor (certificate holder), five years later certificate in hand, knocks on the agent’s door. Surprise, surprise, the certificate for the subcontractor’s commercial general liability policy was issued incorrectly, providing notice of cancellation and additional insured status for the certificate holder, who now has been denied coverage for a claim by the insurance company listed on the certificate.

The agent issued the certificate showing the general contractor as an additional insured, but the policy was not endorsed accordingly. The agent removed the “endeavor to mail” language from the bottom of the certificate after the liability underwriter gave the agent permission to do so in writing. In other words, the underwriter gave the agent permission to commit professional suicide.

So what went wrong?

When Issuing Certificates

A final word to the wise: Don’t take the certificate of insurance for granted. This document can come back to haunt you years into the future.